This was totally new to me!

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Beosystem10

Member (SA)
I had a Philips record player in my '64 Morris Oxford VI, later transferred into the '67 that came next. These things have no bias adjustment yet they require a high downforce to track in a moving vehicle so the arm is spring loaded which tends to cause one wall of the record side to be eroded which wrecks the single but it was a talking point on club rallies and road events.
In practice, for daily use, I converted both cars to negative earth and had a hidden modern radio/cassette in the passenger side glove hole which was much less temperamental.

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I sold that on eBay for more than I needed to buy another sound example of the same car with a fresh test certificate!

Unlike that Chrysler one, which only played 16 2/3rpm records, the Philips only played 45 rpm singles. Sound quality on 16s is quite poor and the only records I have that play at 16 are the six 12" ones that make up the Linguaphone English language course. I didn't need to learn the language but they were the only 16s I could find at the time. :blush:
 

JustCruisin

Member (SA)
Those are sought-after rare accessories for the old schoolers..
Color bars are a must-have item as well..
http://youtu.be/b9jbA96pc-Y
 

bill

Member (SA)
I've sold a few of them. Some nice profit out of them as most thrift stores don't have a clue what they are. My grandfather had a chysler new yorker with one . It worked for a week or so and well.......
 
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